Most of us are very familiar with crosswalks and traffic signals. We pass a few of them every day.

We might get stopped by a red light from one of them. But have we ever stopped to think how much one of these things costs?

One of the bills introduced in the recent legislative session, , tells the story of just one signalized crosswalk yet to be built. (is identical.)

The crosswalk is to be located at the intersection of Vineyard Boulevard and River Street in Honolulu, at the edge of Chinatown. It鈥檚 kind of a busy area for cars and people, with Vineyard being six lanes of traffic all going Ewa (west, for you non-locals).

Apparently, our lawmakers agreed some time ago that a crosswalk with traffic signals is needed there. Funds were appropriated for the project back in the . At the time, $750,000 was set aside for both design and construction.

Honolulu city crosswalk walk downtown. 28 jan 2015. photograph Cory Lum/Civil Beat
A crosswalk in downtown Honolulu. Construction of new crosswalks is apparently not so easy. Cory Lum/Civil Beat/2015

Although the 2014 budget act was signed into law on June 26, 2014, the text of SB 2004 recites that the funds were released in April 2015, or 10 months later. That date is significant because the state鈥檚 fiscal biennium ended at the end of June 2015, at which point the funds appropriated in the 2014 bill were to lapse.

The Department of Transportation was able to get a contract signed to design the intersection, but not to construct it. The design work seems to have cost about $230,000.

Because the crosswalk was still needed and wasn鈥檛 built yet, lawmakers took up the cause again in the 2016 legislative session and were able to get it included in the . This time, the appropriation was for $523,000, which probably was what remained of the originally appropriated $750,000 after the design costs were taken out.

But alas, delays plagued the project once again.

Mixed Signals

Our state Department of Transportation posted a notice on Oct. 10, 2017, requesting bids by Nov. 9. The work included 鈥渋nstallation of traffic signals, underground ducts, traffic/pedestrian signal poles, foundations, controller hardware, curb ramps, BMP, pavement markers, lane extension, electrical installation and connection and removal of chain link fences.鈥

(Sounds pretty involved 鈥 but would it be different installing any other traffic signal?)

On Nov. 9, 2017, the bids were opened. Two , the lower of which was for $816,000. That鈥檚 in addition to the design work that already had been done, putting the total project cost north of $1 million.

Because this new project cost is somewhat larger than the $750,000 originally appropriated for the project, SB 2004 asks for an additional $352,800 on top of the funds in the 2016 appropriation. The bill says that 鈥渃onstruction costs have increased over the intervening years.鈥 (That鈥檚 an increase of over 13 percent per year. I must be in the wrong business.)

The median price of a single-family home, which includes design, construction, electrical work, plumbing, and the dirt on which all of it sits, $760,000 in 2017 according to Honolulu real estate firm Locations. That amount of money doesn鈥檛 seem to be enough to pay for one crosswalk with a traffic signal. And a single-family home can be built much more quickly.

Is this the new normal? Is this a signal for the need to raise taxes again? Please tell me that it鈥檚 not!

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